Utilisateur
Flame loop cool it remove cap flame tube lip take sample flame lip again recap and reflame loop
About 45 degrees
Do not place it on the bench
To reduce contamination before and after sampling
Do not flame the lip because it will melt
Flame loop cool it open lid slightly near flame pick a small portion of colony and close lid
A very small amount less than the size of a pen tip unless a heavy inoculum is needed
Flame it to sterilize and let it cool before putting it down
Wash hands wear PPE tie hair back tidy workspace disinfect bench work quickly and avoid talking over sterile materials
Before beginning and after completing an experiment
Tied back and if long enough in a bun
To stay within the aseptic zone
To prevent cross contamination
Discard it in the appropriate receptacles
On the bottom agar side not the lid
The lid can be switched or removed
Your name TA or section sample identity date and agar type
Permanent marker
To dilute bacteria and isolate single colonies
Single cells grow into isolated colonies
A culture containing only one bacterial species
Three sections
Streak the first third of the plate in a zig zag pattern
It deposits the most bacteria for later dilution
Flame the loop and let it cool
Cross the first section 1 to 2 times then streak a fresh area without crossing earlier streaks again
Cross the second section 1 to 2 times then streak the final area without crossing older streaks again
Isolated colonies appear in the later streaks
Use less inoculum cross less from the previous section or make the third zone larger
Use more inoculum and cross more from previous streaks
The loop was too hot and killed the cells
Like a pencil with a gentle touch
It gouges and damages the agar
Draw a T on the plate to define sections
Agar side up in a bag
To prevent condensation from dripping onto colonies
37°C for 24 hours unless otherwise stated
To reduce drying and contamination
The TA moves them to 4°C for storage
With the agar side up and not taped together
Condenser objective and ocular lenses
Focuses light onto the specimen
Magnifies the image of the specimen
Further magnifies the image for viewing
Adjusts how much light reaches the specimen
Proper focusing and alignment of light for even illumination and good contrast
They are the most delicate and expensive part of the microscope
1000X
An area where cells are spread out and not clumped
The shape and arrangement of individual bacterial cells
Coccus and bacillus
A spherical bacterial cell
A rod shaped bacterial cell
Two cocci together
Groups of four cocci
A packet like cluster of cocci
Chains of cocci
Grape like clusters of cocci
A very short oval rod
Pairs of bacilli
Bacilli arranged side by side like a fence
Chains of bacilli
The visible appearance of a colony on agar
It helps describe bacteria and recognize possible pure cultures
Smooth rough glistening and dull
An even regular surface
An uneven irregular surface
A shiny surface
A surface lacking shine
Opaque translucent and iridescent or metallic
Light does not pass through
Light passes partly through
The colony reflects light like a colored sheen
Circular punctiform spindle filamentous rhizoid and irregular
Flat raised convex pulvinate and umbonate
Entire undulate lobate filamentous erose and curled
A smooth even edge
A wavy edge
An edge with rounded lobes
A thread like edge
A serrated or jagged edge
An edge with concentric ring like waves
Cell morphology describes individual cells under the microscope while colony morphology describes visible colony appearance on agar
A stain where all cells on the slide stain the same color
Methylene blue crystal violet and safranin
The cells are stained while the background remains clear
The background is stained while the cells repel the stain
A stain that distinguishes different cell types or structures by staining them differently
The Gram stain
Whether bacteria are Gram positive or Gram negative based on cell wall structure
Purple
Pink
Their thick peptidoglycan traps the crystal violet iodine complex
Alcohol removes the primary stain and they take up the safranin counterstain
Crystal violet iodine ethanol and safranin
Primary stain colors all cells purple
Acts as a mordant and fixes crystal violet in the cells
Decolorizes Gram negative cells by removing the crystal violet iodine complex
Counterstains decolorized cells pink
Too long can remove stain from Gram positive cells and too short can leave Gram negative cells purple
